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Fierce Afghan Resistance Kills 10 U.S. Troops, Downs Chopper

Afghan resistance targeting U.S. choppers

ZURMAT, Afghanistan, March 4 (News Agencies) – At least ten U.S. troops were confirmed killed and 38 others injured Monday in the massive assault in the Arma mountains of Paktia province bordering Pakistan.

A U.S. helicopter was shot down and a second hit in eastern Afghanistan, killing nine U.S. troops, as warplanes Monday bombarded the mountains to smash suspected Al-Qaeda and Taliban hideouts, reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).

One Special Forces MH-47 helicopter was shot down, killing "a small number" of U.S. troops and injuring others, Pentagon spokeswoman Victoria Clarke said.

"We can confirm that sometime early evening our time last night an MH-47 was fired upon and went down. We have some small numbers of U.S. troops killed," Clarke said Monday in Washington.

U.S. Defense Secretary, Donald Rumsfeld, speaking at a news briefing late Monday, said, “Nine U.S. troops were killed and some others were injured, as well as some Afghan soldiers killed”.

A second MH-47 helicopter was hit but managed to take off and flee, leaving behind a U.S. soldier who was later found dead, the official said.

Meanwhile, a reporter for the Toronto Star newspaper badly injured her leg Monday when the car in which she and other journalists were traveling came under attack in eastern Afghanistan.

Kathleen Kenna, the paper's South Asia correspondent, was hit in her right thigh by a grenade or bullet while traveling between Zurmat and the provincial capital of Gardez covering the offensive.

U.S. bombers continued to pound a two-kilometer (one-mile) stretch of the Arma mountains, dislodging snow from their caps, as a surveillance drone flew overhead.

"Yesterday and today have been the heaviest bombing so far," said Jamil, deputy local commander in Zurmat, a village three kilometers (about two miles) from the fighting.

U.S. warplanes have mounted a full assault on the frigid mountains since early Saturday to oust hundreds of al-Qaeda and Taliban fighters, possibly including top leaders, holed up inside a network of caves.

Under U.S. advisers' guidance, some 1,000 Afghan troops have been trying to mount a ground offensive. But soldiers said progress has been halted by Al-Qaeda resistance. More than 1,000 troops are taking part in the operation.

"Al-Qaeda men are not in a position to launch a counterattack, but as soon as the Afghan-Americans come close they are opening fire from the caves. As the security belt gets tighter, so the resistance gets stronger," said Paktia province's governor Taj Mohammad Wardak.

"The fighting is non-stop between the Afghan-Americans and Al-Qaeda," he told AFP in Gardez, 30 kilometers (18 miles) north of Zurmat.

"I can tell you that if there are any casualties on the Afghan-American side, it will be 10 times as bad on Al-Qaeda side," he said.

A spokesman for the U.S. Central Command said Sunday that hundreds of Al-Qaeda and Taliban holdouts were believed to be hiding in the mountains. Local officials, however, have put the figure at around 2,300.

The governor said bombing and fighting was centered around Shahi Kot, on the corner of Paktia and Paktika provinces. He expected the operation would last a few more days.

"Shahi Kot is more important than we were thinking and maybe some top Al-Qaeda leaders are there," Wardak said.

"I have heard that Osama bin Laden is there, but I'm not sure. It's not confirmed. We will know everything in a matter of two or three days."

Wardak said the Afghan troops, whom he described as "semi-irregular interim government forces," were under direct U.S. command.

The U.S. Central Command said Sunday that Australia, Canada, Denmark, France, Germany and Norway were among the coalition countries participating in the operation.

France confirmed Monday that Mirage 2000-D warplanes were flying near Gardez and could be used in bombings depending on what is needed.

Meanwhile, Afghan forces were reported to have set up posts on all roads leading from the area of fighting.

"The purpose of these new posts is to ensure that al-Qaeda and Taliban members do not escape to Pakistan," a local commander told the Pakistan-based Afghan Islamic Press.

 

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